Writings

Technology, open source, personal essays, and everything that isn't climate.

You don't need to suck

Three months ago I decided that I was no longer going to suck at design.

This seemed like an impossibly daunting task at first. I started with a project: redesigning the MHVLUG website. Then I went to Amazon looking for a book on web design. Some searching, reading reviews, looking at related/recommended books, and I bought a bunch of books. And I spent the next couple of months reading through them. The best books out of the lot have been The Design of Everyday Things, Don't Make Me Think, and The Non-Designer's Design Book. I read more than that, which is an important point. If you want to learn something new you're going to need to read more than just 1 book.

Basic design, like most other things, has rules and patterns. Just knowing rules and patterns isn't going to make you a great designer, but it will keep you from sucking too much. Having a basic theoretical framework gives you something to work with besides the really scary blank page. These books definitely did that for me.

Books will only get you so far, because you can nod along when reading a book, assuming that you understood, but until you go to apply it, you have no idea if you internalized it. Fortunately I had a project, so after a couple of months of reading, I dove into the project, doing the bulk of the work over Thanksgiving Holiday, with a lot of tweaking since. The results, I think are pretty good.

You don't need to suck at anything. If there is something you wish you were better at, it's within your control to get better at it. It takes hard work, time, and practice, but that's just life.

Related: If you have a website, read this book · What have you changed your mind about? · Our Amazing Future

Colbert and Tyson

Neil deGrasse Tyson is one of my favorite speakers. I've gone on Tyson binges on youtube before, watching one video after another of talks that he's given. You only end up smarter for doing so. And now there is a brand new, long form, talk to add to the list.

Stephen Colbert does a long form, over an hour, interview with Neil deGrasse Tyson on stage. There are bits you've heard other places (like his Titanic story), but lots of new perspectives as well. Treat your brain, and take the time to watch this.
Related: Neil DeGrasse Tyson on Science Literacy · Leadership Summed Up · New Cosmos

Brother HL-4150 vs. Linux

I love having a duplexing color laser printer at home, and thanks to my friend John for the recommendation on the Brother HL-4150. However, in the last few months I found that print quality was way out of whack from Linux, last night I found the fix.

What was most curious was that if I printed from Adobe Acrobat, everything was good, but any other program in the system, and the output was jaggy, and the colors were faded. The fix was simple, but took a little while to find.

Make the print url: lpd://(Your printer's IP address)/binary_p1

Life is good again, output looks great, and I don't have to jump through Adobe hoops. And if you are looking for an affordable color home laser printer, I'd definitely recommend this one.

Related: The Year of The Linux Desktop? · Convenient Linux Printing · Seriously underwhelmed by Adobe AIR on Linux

Finished Refinishing

finished refinishing

These cedar benches were built by my father a number of years ago, after we took down a bunch of trees on the property, including some 100 year old cedar trees. After 3 years of weathering their original finish had worn through. Based on the success I had with our the cherry bench in the spring, I went to town on these this week.

The one on the right is the state of the benches before being touched. The one on the left was after an hour with a belt sander. The cedar red color really jumped back out in the process.

This is a look at the benches after the final coat of poly was put on. They are still drying, so there is some artifacting that won't be there once it hardens. I'm very curious how long the deep red heart wood is going to stay that color, or if it will orange like cedar does when exposed to air.

Related: New Cold Frame · Deck Finished, awaiting inspection · XKCD color survey

Updated Family Tree

updated family tree

When I was wandering around the DC Zoo this summer, I was thinking how cool it would be to have a "you are here" map of speciation for each critter you were looking at. So I find it very cool that in the latest issue of Science they tried to build just that for Mammals, based on the latest genetic information we've got. A more complete writeup can be found here.

Related: The Edible Christmas Tree · Our Daughter Arwen · Cool Eco Houses